freebsd-nq/contrib/sendmail/libsm/setvbuf.c
2002-06-11 21:12:04 +00:00

191 lines
4.2 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 2000-2001 Sendmail, Inc. and its suppliers.
* All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 1990, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* Chris Torek.
*
* By using this file, you agree to the terms and conditions set
* forth in the LICENSE file which can be found at the top level of
* the sendmail distribution.
*/
#include <sm/gen.h>
SM_RCSID("@(#)$Id: setvbuf.c,v 1.32 2001/09/11 04:04:49 gshapiro Exp $")
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sm/io.h>
#include <sm/heap.h>
#include <sm/assert.h>
#include <sm/conf.h>
#include "local.h"
/*
** SM_IO_SETVBUF -- set the buffering type for a file
**
** Set one of the different kinds of buffering, optionally including
** a buffer.
** If 'size' is == 0 then an "optimal" size will be selected.
** If 'buf' is == NULL then space will be allocated at 'size'.
**
** Parameters:
** fp -- the file that buffering is to be changed for
** timeout -- time allowed for completing the function
** buf -- buffer to use
** mode -- buffering method to use
** size -- size of 'buf'
**
** Returns:
** Failure: SM_IO_EOF
** Success: 0 (zero)
*/
int
sm_io_setvbuf(fp, timeout, buf, mode, size)
SM_FILE_T *fp;
int timeout;
char *buf;
int mode;
size_t size;
{
int ret, flags;
size_t iosize;
int ttyflag;
int fd;
struct timeval to;
SM_REQUIRE_ISA(fp, SmFileMagic);
/*
** Verify arguments. The `int' limit on `size' is due to this
** particular implementation. Note, buf and size are ignored
** when setting SM_IO_NBF.
*/
if (mode != SM_IO_NBF)
if ((mode != SM_IO_FBF && mode != SM_IO_LBF &&
mode != SM_IO_NOW) || (int) size < 0)
return SM_IO_EOF;
/*
** Write current buffer, if any. Discard unread input (including
** ungetc data), cancel line buffering, and free old buffer if
** malloc()ed. We also clear any eof condition, as if this were
** a seek.
*/
ret = 0;
SM_CONVERT_TIME(fp, fd, timeout, &to);
(void) sm_flush(fp, &timeout);
if (HASUB(fp))
FREEUB(fp);
fp->f_r = fp->f_lbfsize = 0;
flags = fp->f_flags;
if (flags & SMMBF)
{
sm_free((void *) fp->f_bf.smb_base);
fp->f_bf.smb_base = NULL;
}
flags &= ~(SMLBF | SMNBF | SMMBF | SMOPT | SMNPT | SMFEOF | SMNOW |
SMFBF);
/* If setting unbuffered mode, skip all the hard work. */
if (mode == SM_IO_NBF)
goto nbf;
/*
** Find optimal I/O size for seek optimization. This also returns
** a `tty flag' to suggest that we check isatty(fd), but we do not
** care since our caller told us how to buffer.
*/
flags |= sm_whatbuf(fp, &iosize, &ttyflag);
if (size == 0)
{
buf = NULL; /* force local allocation */
size = iosize;
}
/* Allocate buffer if needed. */
if (buf == NULL)
{
if ((buf = sm_malloc(size)) == NULL)
{
/*
** Unable to honor user's request. We will return
** failure, but try again with file system size.
*/
ret = SM_IO_EOF;
if (size != iosize)
{
size = iosize;
buf = sm_malloc(size);
}
}
if (buf == NULL)
{
/* No luck; switch to unbuffered I/O. */
nbf:
fp->f_flags = flags | SMNBF;
fp->f_w = 0;
fp->f_bf.smb_base = fp->f_p = fp->f_nbuf;
fp->f_bf.smb_size = 1;
return ret;
}
flags |= SMMBF;
}
/*
** Kill any seek optimization if the buffer is not the
** right size.
**
** SHOULD WE ALLOW MULTIPLES HERE (i.e., ok iff (size % iosize) == 0)?
*/
if (size != iosize)
flags |= SMNPT;
/*
** Fix up the SM_FILE_T fields, and set sm_cleanup for output flush on
** exit (since we are buffered in some way).
*/
if (mode == SM_IO_LBF)
flags |= SMLBF;
else if (mode == SM_IO_NOW)
flags |= SMNOW;
else if (mode == SM_IO_FBF)
flags |= SMFBF;
fp->f_flags = flags;
fp->f_bf.smb_base = fp->f_p = (unsigned char *)buf;
fp->f_bf.smb_size = size;
/* fp->f_lbfsize is still 0 */
if (flags & SMWR)
{
/*
** Begin or continue writing: see sm_wsetup(). Note
** that SMNBF is impossible (it was handled earlier).
*/
if (flags & SMLBF)
{
fp->f_w = 0;
fp->f_lbfsize = -fp->f_bf.smb_size;
}
else
fp->f_w = size;
}
else
{
/* begin/continue reading, or stay in intermediate state */
fp->f_w = 0;
}
atexit(sm_cleanup);
return ret;
}